BACK TO SCHOOL SAFETY TIPS FOR PARENTS
key 911 Be sure your child knows His or her :
      home phone number (including area code) and
      address, your work number,
      the number of another trusted adult, and
      how to use 911 for emergencies.
Make sure your child has enough change to make a phone call or they carry
a telephone calling card.

walking your child to school

Plan a walking route to school or the bus stop. Choose the most direct way with the fewest street crossings and use intersections with crossing guards. Test the route with your child. Tell him or her to stay away from parks, vacant lots, fields, and other places where there aren't many people around.

boy on bike



Teach children -- whether walking, biking, or riding the bus to school -- to obey all traffic signals, signs, traffic officers, and safety patrols. Remind them to be extra careful in rainy, foggy, or snowy weather.

walking with friends

Make sure they walk to and from school with others -- a friend, neighbor, brother, sister.

school carpool

When car pooling, drop off and pick up children as close to school as possible. Don't leave until they have entered the school yard or building.
don't talk to strangers Teach your child never to talk to strangers or accept rides or gifts from strangers. Remember, a stranger is anyone you or your children doesn't know well or doesn't trust. NOTE: The exception to this rule is when they need help and no one they know is around. You must teache them who "authority strangers" are. People like store clerks, security people, anyone who belongs in the area they are in.

home alone


If your child is home alone for a few hours after school:

Set up rules for locking doors and windows, answering the door or
telephone.Make sure he or she checks in with you or a neighbor immediately after school. Agree on rules for inviting friends over and for going to a friend's house when no adult is home.
fearful child Take time to listen carefully to children's fears and feelings about people or places that scare them or make them feel uneasy. Tell them to trust their instincts. Take complaints about bullies and other concerns seriously.